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)


     
    This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
    Auerbach Weighs in for gTLD Lotteries | Log in/Create an Account | Top | 49 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.
    Re:A question re less market, more community
    by lsolum on Tuesday April 08 2003, @06:30AM (#11464)
    User #3416 Info | http://lsolum.blogspot.com/
    Vittorio,
    If our paper implies that the only demand is for commercial gTLDs, that is certainly an error that we should correct. Here is out thought. To the extent there is a need to subsidize nonprofit gTLDs or even commercial gTLDs directed at LDCs, the question becomes, how can the resources be made available to do this? On that question, an auction plan has a tremendous advantage, because it will bring in resources from commercial gTLD auctions, which then can subsidize the nonprofit gTLD sector. The current system, beauty contests, is enormously expensive, and limits the nonprofit sTLD sector to the most wealthy nonprofits and international organizations. This is truly the worst of all possible worlds. Are you familiar with the experience of regulatory agencies using a public-interest (beauty contest) approach for spectrum allocation. That experience has been uniformly dismal--large commercial interests have inevitably dominated the process. Even if the ICANN board brings the best of intentions to the process, over 75 years of experience suggests that if commercial interests compete with public interests in a beauty contest scheme, the commercial interests will win out in the long run. Auctions channel the commercial gTLD pressures into competitive bidding, leaving ICANN free from those pressures (and with greater resources) to deal with public interest issues.
    Thank you for the very informative response.
    Lawrence SolumLawrence Solum
    [ Reply to This | Parent ]
    Re:A question re less market, more community by lsolum
    Re:A question re less market, more community
    by vbertola on Tuesday April 08 2003, @09:28PM (#11469)
    User #3435 Info | http://bertola.eu.org/
    What would be wrong with a system where ICANN would not make beauty contests nor auctions, but simply apply a standard cost recovery fee (possibly different for commercial and non-commercial applicants) to check whether the application meets some minimal technical standards? It could then authorize all the new gTLDs that meet the requirements - I'm quite sure that there's space for all the applicants. You could perhaps use auctions or beauty contests only when more than one applicant wants the same string (or conflicting strings, ie .apple and .apples) and they can't agree on changing their requested strings.

    --vb. (Vittorio Bertola)
    [ Reply to This | Parent ]


    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