The link works fine for me.  But here it is in any event:
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                     "Next week the United Nations' International Telecommunications  Union will meet in Dubai to figure out how to control the Internet.  Representatives from 193 nations will attend the nearly two week long  meeting, according to news reports.
Next  week the ITU holds a negotiating conference in Dubai, and past months  have brought many leaks of proposals for a new treaty. U.S.  congressional resolutions and much of the commentary, including in this  column, have focused on proposals by authoritarian governments to censor  the Internet. Just as objectionable are proposals that ignore how the  Internet works, threatening its smooth and open operations," reports the  
Wall Street Journal.
 
"Having the Internet rewired by bureaucrats would be like handing a  Stradivarius to a gorilla. The Internet is made up of 40,000 networks  that interconnect among 425,000 global routes, cheaply and efficiently  delivering messages and other digital content among more than two  billion people around the world, with some 500,000 new users a day. ...
"Proposals for the new ITU treaty run to more than 200 pages. One  idea is to apply the ITU's long-distance telephone rules to the Internet  by creating a 'sender-party-pays' rule. International phone calls  include a fee from the originating country to the local phone company at  the receiving end. Under a sender-pays approach, U.S.-based websites  would pay a local network for each visitor from overseas, effectively  taxing firms such as 
Google and 
Facebook.  The idea is technically impractical because unlike phone networks, the  Internet doesn't recognize national borders. But authoritarians are  pushing the tax, hoping their citizens will be cut off from U.S.  websites that decide foreign visitors are too expensive to serve."
 
Arthur Herman explains "The UN's Internet Grab" here.
 
And even Google has already come out against the ITU.
 
"The ITU is the wrong place to make decisions about the future of the Internet," 
says Google.  "Only governments have a voice at the ITU. This includes governments  that do not support a free and open Internet. Engineers, companies, and  people that build and use the web have no vote."
 
"The ITU is also secretive. The treaty conference and proposals are confidential," adds Google.
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Read the Arthur Herman link, too.  It spells out a lot more detail.