Islanders Demand Return of ‘.IO’ Domain From Colonizers

Published at: July 10, 2020

The popular ‘.io’ domain name has become part of a complaint against the United Kingdom for  alleged human rights violations tied to its continuing administration of territories in the Indian Ocean. 

Sales of the ‘.io’ domain name are being contested as a part of a complaint filed by former islanders of the Chagos Archipelago, which has been at the center of a territorial dispute between Mauritius, a former British colony, and the U.K. since the 1980s. 

Now highly popular with numerous crypto, blockchain and other tech companies — not to mention various scams — ‘.io’ was formally the country code top-level domain (ccTLD) designation for “Indian Ocean.” Despite this, the domain name was acquired on the open market in the late 1990s by a U.K.-based firm, Internet Computer Bureau (ICB). 

The U.K. government receives an undisclosed share of revenue from sales of .io, in what the complaint claims is part of its ongoing colonial expropriation of the economic property and livelihood of the former islanders:

“The ccTLD .IO rights are a valuable property and generate millions of dollars in fees for ICB annually. The 1997 contract or agreement grants ICB exclusive rights to exploit this asset in the same way colonial powers have delegated exclusive rights in Africa to private companies to act on behalf of the colonizer [...] ICB therefore is the Occupying Power’s agent and acts in its stead in the matter of ccTLD .IO.”

The complaint notes that domain end users of .io include “thousands of crypto asset platforms” — among them exchanges, Initial Coin Offerings, and crypto miners — who “generate vast sums of unregulated and untaxed revenue and trade with volume of billions of dollars per day.” 

Crypto firms are able to generate this sum of allegedly unregulated revenue, the complaint claims, by taking advantage of “nonexistent commercial regulation” in the disputed territory. 

In addition to unjustly profiting from domain name sales, the complaint alleges that the U.K. “tolerates massive criminality” in overlooking the existence of “thousands of crypto criminal entities” registered on .io.

The colonial backdrop

The Chagos Archipelago was ruled over as a dependency of Mauritius by the U.K. between 1814 and 1965, when it was detached from Mauritius in order to establish a new colony designated the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT). In addition to the archipelago, BIOT also includes several other islands that were detached from the Seychelles.

The Chagossians were displaced between 1967-1973 in order to make way for a joint military base with the United States, which exists to this day. 

Since the 1980s, Mauritius has sought to regain control over BIOT, claiming that its detachment shortly before Mauritius’ independence (in 1968) violated a 1960 UN resolution and has compromised the process of decolonization. In 2017, the United Nations General Assembly referred the decades-long dispute to the International Court of Justice (ICJ). 

In 2019, the ICJ ordered the U.K. to hand back the Chagos Archipelago to Mauritius “s rapidly as possible,” ruling that its continued occupation of the islands is illegal.

Tags
Related Posts
Could Russia lead Eastern Europe’s crypto boom?
Not unlike many other jurisdictions around the world, Russia has come to recognize the potential benefits and risks flowing from cryptocurrencies by taking its first step to define and codify digital assets. The new Russian legislation dubbed “On Digital Financial Assets” sets a clear direction for the treatment of cryptocurrencies by authorities and how both individuals and businesses can handle them in everyday practice. Nevertheless, the new legislation may give pause to payments companies and fintech companies keen on expanding into the Russian market. While the approach of the Russian legislature toward cryptocurrencies — or digital assets, as they are …
Technology / Sept. 6, 2020
UK authorities to focus on stablecoin regulations to prevent monopolies
John Glen, the United Kingdom's financial services minister, has said that stablecoins will be the main focus of the government’s crypto regulatory activity. Glen made delivered his comments while addressing a conference organized by City & Financial Global on Tuesday, Reuters reported. For Glen, the U.K.’s decision to prioritize stablecoins over regulating the broader financial market is due to fears of monopolies emerging in the market based on the limited number of participants offering fiat-pegged cryptocurrency payment services. “There is the potential for some firms to swiftly achieve dominance and crowd out other players, due to their ability to scale …
Regulation / March 30, 2021
Following Brexit, the UK asks crypto industry about rules for cross-border stablecoins
Her Majesty's Treasury requests and requires the crypto industry's input on prospective regulation. In a Thursday announcement of open consultation, the United Kingdom's finance policy department is asking the crypto community to weigh in on a series of proposals: "The government invites views from a wide range of stakeholders, and particularly firms engaged in cryptoasset activities." While Brexit formally came into effect early last year, New Year's Eve was the end of freedom to work and live between the United Kingdom and the European Union. The question lingers in today's consultation as to how much the nation's crypto rules should …
Regulation / Jan. 7, 2021
Uphold becomes registered crypto-asset firm in UK post-FCA approval
A European subsidiary of United States-based crypto trading platform Uphold has received approval from the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). According to the FCA website, Uphold’s U.K. subsidiary Uphold Europe Limited gained regulatory approval on Feb. 17, 2022, joining the select list of 32 firms that have received FCA approval as a Registered Crypto Asset service provider, out of the 200 that applied. The approval signifies that the firm is in compliance with the U.K. Anti-Money Laundering and CounTerrorist Financing regulations. In order for crypto exchanges and service providers to offer their services to U.K.-based customers, they must register …
Regulation / Feb. 23, 2022
Self-custody, control and identity: How regulators got it wrong
The recent European Union proposal requiring centralized crypto exchanges and custodial wallet providers to collect and verify personal information about self-custodial wallet holders shows the dangers of recycling traditional finance (TradFi) rules and applying them to crypto without appreciating the conceptual differences. We can expect to see more of this as countries look to implement the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Travel Rule, initially designed for wire transfers, to transfers of crypto assets. The (missing) link between self-custody, control and identity The aim of the proposed EU rules is “to ensure crypto-assets can be traced in the same way as …
Adoption / May 1, 2022