ICANNWatch
 
  Inside ICANNWatch  
Submit Story
Home
Lost Password
Preferences
Site Messages
Top 10 Lists
Latest Comments
Search by topic

Our Mission
ICANN for Beginners
About Us
How To Use This Site
ICANNWatch FAQ
Slash Tech Info
Link to Us
Write to Us

  Useful ICANN sites  
  • ICANN itself
  • Bret Fausett's ICANN Blog
  • Internet Governance Project
  • UN Working Group on Internet Governance
  • Karl Auerbach web site
  • Müller-Maguhn home
  • UDRPinfo.com;
  • UDRPlaw.net;
  • CircleID;
  • LatinoamerICANN Project
  • ICB Tollfree News

  •   At Large Membership and Civil Society Participation in ICANN  
  • icannatlarge.com;
  • Noncommercial Users Constituency of ICANN
  • NAIS Project
  • ICANN At Large Study Committee Final Report
  • ICANN (non)Members page
  • ICANN Membership Election site

  • ICANN-Related Reading
    Browse ICANNWatch by Subject

    Ted Byfied
    - ICANN: Defending Our Precious Bodily Fluids
    - Ushering in Banality
    - ICANN! No U CANN't!
    - roving_reporter
    - DNS: A Short History and a Short Future

    David Farber
    - Overcoming ICANN (PFIR statement)

    A. Michael Froomkin
    - When We Say US™, We Mean It!
    - ICANN 2.0: Meet The New Boss
    - Habermas@ discourse.net: Toward a Critical Theory of Cyberspace
    - ICANN and Anti-Trust (with Mark Lemley)
    - Wrong Turn in Cyberspace: Using ICANN to Route Around the APA & the Constitution (html)
    - Form and Substance in Cyberspace
    - ICANN's "Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy"-- Causes and (Partial) Cures

    Milton Mueller
    - Ruling the Root
    - Success by Default: A New Profile of Domain Name Trademark Disputes under ICANN's UDRP
    - Dancing the Quango: ICANN as International Regulatory Regime
    - Goverments and Country Names: ICANN's Transformation into an Intergovernmental Regime
    - Competing DNS Roots: Creative Destruction or Just Plain Destruction?
    - Rough Justice: A Statistical Assessment of the UDRP
    - ICANN and Internet Governance

    David Post
    - Governing Cyberspace, or Where is James Madison When We Need Him?
    - The 'Unsettled Paradox': The Internet, the State, and the Consent of the Governed

    Jonathan Weinberg
    - Sitefinder and Internet Governance
    - ICANN, Internet Stability, and New Top Level Domains
    - Geeks and Greeks
    - ICANN and the Problem of Legitimacy

    Highlights of the ICANNWatch Archive
    (June 1999 - March 2001)


     
    Government Advisory Committee (GAC) XXX Controversy Signals Major Change in ICANN
    posted by Mueller on Saturday December 03 2005, @08:58AM

    It is now clear that by sending its letter of August 12 blocking approval of the .XXX domain, the US Government has done more to undermine ICANN’s status as a non-governmental, multi-stakeholder policy body than any of its Internet governance “enemies” in the ITU, China, Brazil, or Iran. And despite all the calls for a government role that would ensure “rule of law” and “accountability” of ICANN, the interventions of governments are making this aspect of Internet governance more arbitrary and less accountable.

    The apparently innocuous announcement by Vint Cerf Thursday that the .XXX application has been removed from the Board’s agenda until the next meeting conceals a maelstrom of dirty politics.



    .XXX was removed from the agenda because the GAC demanded to see the reports of the evaluation teams before a decision was made. In meeting this demand, ICANN warps and corrupts its TLD approval process in two ways. First, and most obviously, it adds a completely new layer to the application process, ex post. Approval or disapproval was supposed to be based on the Board’s reading of the evaluation reports and the applicants’ response. Now, we learn, there is another process to go through, if politically powerful people don’t like you. Second, the demand for a review of the reports introduces a targeted, discriminatory element to the evaluation. For TLDs that have contracts already, the release of the team evaluation reports is harmless. For the two who have not been approved, .xxx and .asia the release of these reports can only be damaging, as the reports may contain information that can be used against them. And of course, .XXX and .ASIA are the two applications that have been targeted by individual GAC members.

    Governments in Europe and Brazil are now openly saying in private conversations that they are using the .xxx application as a “hostage” in their efforts to give themselves more governmental control over ICANN. The end-game goal of this effort seems to be a GAC veto over TLD selections and a strengthened role for governments. In his report at the ICANN meeting, GAC Chair Sharil Mohd Tarmizi noted that GAC wants to improve the way it addresses public policy issues and that it was interested in new TLDs in particular.

    Oh and by the way, did you know that ICANN Board members have received, at their home address, threatening letters from religious Right fanatics warning them to oppose the domain? It is likely that the US Commerce Department is the party that supplied them with the home addresses and contact information of the Board members.

    As I predicted months ago, the call for “delaying” the contractual negotiations on .XXX in order to “consider all points of view” has simply given its enemies the time needed to kill it or to further exploit it for political purposes. This was not unintentional.

    In effect, some governments within GAC are using the .XXX controversy to request information and conduct an investigation which will place them in the position of ultimate decision maker over the fate of this – and presumably future – TLDs. In its attempt to appease this effort, ICANN has modified its process after the fact, and in doing that it has sowed confusion and disarray, even among its own staff and Board. When GAC first started to demand the evaluation reports after the Luxembourg meeting, someone on the staff told the EU that they were already available. The EU felt lied to when they discovered they were not. In a hasty effort to make the reports public, requests were sent to the applicants to go through the reports and redact any information they felt was commercially sensitive. This also created confusion, as the unfinished applicants objected to the request (.XXX even took it to the ombudsman). Board Chair Vint Cerf had incomplete information about what had been done and what the staff had agreed to do.

    One clear conclusion that can be drawn from this is that GAC can no longer be allowed to function in secret. Its meetings and deliberations in ICANN must all be open to public scrutiny. This would make it more difficult for governments to play narrow political games with the DNS.

     
      ICANNWatch Login  
    Nickname:

    Password:

    [ Don't have an account yet? Please create one. It's not required, but as a registered user you can customize the site, post comments with your name, and accumulate reputation points ("karma") that will make your comments more visible. ]

     
      Related Links  
    · ITU
    · Vinton G. Cerf
    · European Union
    · Government Advisory Committee
    · ICANN
    · More Government Advisory Committee (GAC) stories
    · Also by Mueller
     
    This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
    XXX Controversy Signals Major Change in ICANN | Log in/Create an Account | Top | 1 comments | Search Discussion
    Click this button to post a comment to this story
    The options below will change how the comments display
    Threshold:
    Check box to change your default comment view
    The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.

  • Search ICANNWatch.org:


    Privacy Policy: We will not knowingly give out your personal data -- other than identifying your postings in the way you direct by setting your configuration options -- without a court order. All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner. The comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 by ICANNWatch.Org. This web site was made with Slashcode, a web portal system written in perl. Slashcode is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL license.
    You can syndicate our headlines in .rdf, .rss, or .xml. Domain registration services donated by DomainRegistry.com