ICANN

September 09, 2007

It's Time for Paul Twomey to Step Down as CEO of ICANN

MopThose of you who follow the activity (and recent inactivity) on this blog will know that I have been moving. 

I am a regular working class guy who is relocating into what I consider a palace.  I guess I should have known what I was getting myself into .. I've been writing checks on this place for 3 years now.

My wife Michele is the least materialistic person you will ever meet but she sure loves her "nest", so when I said "build whatever you want honey", she really went big.  I didn't even know what my own office would look like and fellas, I suggest we all let our wives design our offices.

I'd never paid attention to so much as a color-swatch, but I feel surprisingly at home here.  This is the kind of office that Angelina Jolie would design for Brad Pitt. It's ridiculous actually..  I love it!!

For the last 10 days our cleaning lady (she makes three times her peers salary) and a team of other girls has been tidying up dust, dirt and debris. Tonight I couldn't stand stepping on another piece of moving-related gunk so I went to the Fosters Food Fair and loaded up on Swiffer pads.  All their Swiffer pads actually ... Then I spent the next three hours Swiffering. The floor they couldn't get clean in 10 days, is now clean.

It's a humbling experience Swiffering. I'm out there replacing moist towel after moist towel on the Swiffer head, rolling up my sleeves and getting dirty in the trenches. It's real. There is no "assistant" at 11pm on Saturday night.  It's just me and the Swiffer, "Mano a Mano". The nooks and crannys that my cleaning lady has overlooked, have been re-discovered by a fresh set of eyes, somebody willing to reach that Swiffer wand out of the same old pattern..  Me..

Come Monday, my cleaning lady and I are going to have a 'little chat'.  There is no way I'm paying three times the going rate if I can pick up "this much" dirt after 10 days straight of her (and her assistants) work.

After coming in and cleaning my feet in the office bathroom sink, I glanced at my email and saw this link sent by my colleague SaharSahar . In it, Paul Twomey seems to pontificate about what the Internet is/does, broadcasting his "vision" for the benefit of the uninformed on Main Street (who likely have little clue about what ICANN does or how the Internet works). Reading this, I couldn't help but be struck that Paul has so insulated himself from the reality of the Internet that he's drwaing on a whisp of 'virtual reality' to describe the direction it's going.

I began to reflect on Paul Twomey's tenure as CEO of ICANN..  Has he done that great a job?  Could the organization have done just as well without him?  Should we be satisfied with this level of public service?

Don't get me wrong,  Paul looks and talks the part .. He has been a fine bureaucrat, but ICANN needs a leader who can do better than simply react and fill the vacuum. The organization needs more of a MacArthur or a Mulholland and less of a Gerald Ford.

Perhaps I'm being too hard on Dr. Twomey, but reading the leader of ICANN use his moment in the spotlight to hypothesize about the future of the virtual world as "virtual", struck me as odd and brought back a flood of unpleasant ICANN memories which may not have "come to be" under better management.

I suggest it's time to elevate the status of the man with the mop (figurative of course,  I'm not stumping) or to place the mop firmly in Dr. Twomey's hands so he can get re-acquainted with how the real "non-virtual", virtual world works.

I am not a "burning bush" of answers but believe ICANN can do better. The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers has plenty of capable bureaucrats. I suggest it's time for Paul Twomey to step down and allow a fresh face to re-invigorate the organization. We need less "virtual reality" and healthy dose of "reality" at ICANN..

Let's start at the top.

July 01, 2007

Wendy Seltzer - Let's Mix Things Up a Bit

SaharSahar sends this link to a blog post covering an essay by Wendy Seltzer about the process by which ICANN is allocating new GTLDs.

Wendy_seltzerI agree with the tenor of her essay.  It's time for ICANN to stop being so rigid about the rules with which new GTLDs are launched.  While I'm not trying to be disrespectful to the GNSO's efforts; the cumulative effect of this committee approach to setting guidelines of how new GTLDs get added, is decidedly negative. They have created the framework of a road to nowhere.

It's time to simplify things relating to new GTLDs ..  Let's throw out the rule-book and mix things up a bit.  Nothing begets nothing.

Quote: ""...To trust the market, ICANN must be willing to let new TLDs fail. Instead of insisting that every new business have a 100-year plan, we should prepare the businesses and their stakeholders for contingency. Ensuring the "stable and secure operation of the Internet's unique identifier systems" should mean developing predictable responses to failure, not demanding impracticable guarantees of perpetual success.""

The irony of Wendy's quote above is that many of the ICANN name-spaces "painstakingly approved for success" have been unabashed failures.. .COOP, .AERO, .TRAVEL  these namespaces are "JOKES" ..  think of all the ICANN man-hours that have gone into name-spaces like these without real registrants taking registrations in them.. and this is with them trying for success! 

GeorgeIt's time for ICANN to take a page from Seinfeld's George Costanza.  This sitcom character changed his life for the better by doing the exact opposite of what his instinct told him to do. Over the course of a season he had moved out of his parents home and landed a job working for the New York Yankees. It's time for ICANN to change their pattern of failure relating to new GTLDs by doing the exact opposite of what instinct tells them.  Add .XXX add .WEB ... stop listening so closely to supporting organizations, which are just that ;)

June 26, 2007

ICANN to "Tighten Up" Domain Name Administration

Thansk for the link Dan!

http://www.itwire.com.au/content/view/13168/53/

I_really_canQuote: "We are going to keep this discussion going, get input from the wider community, and then we will make the changes needed to protect registrants and domain names."

If you're an old-school domain registrant like me, you're probably extraordinarily suspicious of anything ICANN promises to do in favor of registrants. But perhaps this Registerfly fiasco (where a predatory registrar operator went crazy and let your domain names lapse, taking payments without providing service) was just the wake-up call the organization needed.

While it may be difficult for outsiders to believe this, up till recently there was a huge disconnect at ICANN where philosophical policy types did business with "registries" and "registrars" and basically ignored the concerns of the registrants who were paying the bills! Like it or not, the naming system has become a business.. The salad-days of addressing being some nebulous, existential, honor system where monopolistic registries lord over naive techies and ICANN with impunity will not last forever. Better ICANN gets ahead of the curve and structures rules to make the business of naming run better.

I like this new "serve your customer" tune I hear coming from ICANN... and the customer is the registrant.

May 21, 2007

.Travel Domain Extension Going Down the Tubes?

As if you needed another reason to stick with the .com namespace:

>>From Tralliance Corp. 10-Q:
We received a report from our independent accountants, relating to our December 31, 2006 audited financial statements, containing a paragraph stating that our recurring losses from operations and our accumulated deficit raise substantial doubt about our ability to continue as a going concern. The Company continues to incur substantial consolidated net losses and management believes the Company will continue to be unprofitable and use cash in its operations for the foreseeable future. Based upon our current cash resources of approximately $480 thousand at May 4, 2007, management does not believe the Company can operate as a going concern beyond May 2007.<<<

To my friends at ICANN:  Is there a "lifeboat registry" for the registrants of this name-space in the event that the Tralliance .travel registry can't pay the bills and the lights go out? Incidentally, .travel has only 25,000 registrations, total.

May 18, 2007

ICANN Writes...

Frank,

I saw your blog post: http://frankschilling.typepad.com/my_weblog/2007/05/verisign_gets_n.html. I am managing ICANN’s registry failover project. I presented to the ccNSO in Lisbon and provided an update to the Board on 13 March (http://www.icann.org/minutes/minutes-13mar07.htm). In April I also posted on the ICANN blog about the project: http://blog.icann.org/?p=105. We will be posting a comprehensive document on registry failover before San Juan.

Regards,

Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers

4676 Admiralty Way, Suite 330

Marina del Rey, CA 90292

That is terrific.  I think it makes all registrants feel better knowing that ICANN is cognizant of the potential for problems and actively engaged in formulating contingency plans in case the unthinkable happens. Three cheers for all hard working ICANN staff like you. .. and thanks for the note.

Verisign Gets NASDAQ Non-Compliance Notice

http://www.boston.com/business/technology/articles/2007/05/17/verisign_gets_nasdaq_notice/

This delay in filing is related to an ongoing options inquiry. Still it got me thinking..  we often talk about registrar failure, but what about registry failure?  The Registerfy situation is a wake-up call for us all. ICANN should create a back-up plan - some kind of 'Registry Rescuer' (a Plunge Protection Team) in case the unthinkable happens.  It also puts ICANN in a stronger position to de-accredit registries who break the rules and non-complying registries.

May 09, 2007

The Alac is Wack (Part Deux)

Heads_in_the_sand

Want more proof the people shaping rules that govern domain use have very little clue about the environment in which they exist? The 'at large advisory comittee' (ALAC) has just published a paper on the multitude of reasons we should terminate domain tasting (which we all agree is [at this late stage] a huge problem which has to be removed) ..  But consider this post thread:

Let's see, we have:

"2. Creation of consumer confusion

[...]

4. Facilitation of Trademark Abuse

[...]

5. Facilitation of Criminal Activity"

and

"a small number of registrars are tying up millions of domain names that could be registered by the remaining 600 registrars, inhibiting effective competition".

This report is a refreshing bold stand in favor enhanced competition in the areas of consumer confusion, trademark abuse, and criminal activity.

John Berryhill, Ph.d., Esq.
4 West Front St.
Media, PA  19063
(610) XXX-XXXX
(267) XXX-XXXX fax

John,

I'm confused... was that a for or against? Maybe it's too late here?

XXXXXX XXXXXXXX
Chief Executive Officer
XXXXXXXXX XXXXXXX XXX XXX
XXXX X, XX XXXXXX XXXX
XXXXXXXX. XXXXXXX XXXXXXXXX. XXXX
Ph: +XX X XXXXXXXX
Fax: +XX X XXXX 1970
Email: XXXXXXX@XXXXXXXXX.XXX
Web: www.XXXXXXXXXXXXX.com

>I'm confused... was that a for or against?

Precisely.  The document appears at odds with itself.

The issues report suggests that domain tasting consists of domain names that nobody should register.  The report also suggests that tasting prevents non-tasters from registering the domain names that nobody should register.

The conclusion appears to be that it is much better to have thousands of individuals engaged in typosquatting and other abuses using hundreds of different registrars, than it is to have a handful of individuals doing these things through just a few registrars.

The cybersquatting field would apparently benefit from greater competition and diversity among cybersquatters, according to the report.

If we can eliminate these abuses, then Mozilla can greatly increase its revenue, currently estimated at $72M, for including Google search as the default response for non-existing domains.  It won't change the user experience for the average user, but Firefox is indeed a great browser.

May 07, 2007

Hollow ICANN Fee Discount

Shell_game Several stories recently about how ICANN is giving you a 3 cent discount per name on previous renewals..  It's like a game of 3 Card Monty in Times Square though, because most of us are going to give that all back (and more) on the next round of com/net price increases in October. Color this a "feel-good" bag of smoke.

May 02, 2007

Berryhill Is Looking for the ICANN Silly Pills

Jbb_2 In a further rant about the ICANN "Reserved Names" lists, Dr. Berryhill wants to know what they are smoking in Marina Del Rey...

>I do not have a problem with a company using tld.com for their
>own website. I do have a problem with a "registrar" offering 3rd
>level registrations under tld.com, especially if they tell you that
>this is the way the internet is structured,

Marcus, I do not disagree with the observation that there may be questionable practices.  My only question is whether this is a basis for a categorical exclusion of classes of domain names from registration to anyone on a planet of 6.5 billion people, because an ICANN working group knows what's best.  If the question comes down to whether there is a problem with whether one does X or does Y with a domain name, then the question is one step removed from whether everyone must therefore be prohibited from registering said domain name.  Whether any particular domain name may be used abusively is a consideration that applies to all domain names.

"SexualPredators.tld", for an organization combating sexual predators, would probably pass the Marcus "problem" test.  The same name, used as an online meeting place and resource directory for sexual predators, would probably not pass the Marcus "problem" test.  My question is whether as a policy matter we need to prohibit registration of the domain name to anyone and everyone, on the ground that "someone" may do something "bad".

In the immediate context of the "Reserved Names" policy, there are substantial effects.  Leaving aside the ccTLDs for a moment, the "Reserved Names" have traditionally included the initials of various ICANN constituent organizations. 

For example, the strings "ASO" and "IAB" were prohibited from being registered in the 2000 round of new TLD's, e.g. .info, and are mindlessly propagated to each new TLD. Now, the following are US registered trademarks to various companies:

2517102 ASO
2542704 ASO
2654072 ASO/PARTNERS
2539256 ASO
2198279 ASO
2045578 ASO COUNTER NEWS
1619707 ASO

3203966 IAB
3156668 IAB
3102783 IAB
1401532 IAB

You cannot on the one hand say that you don't have a problem with companies registering their names and marks as domain names, and simultaneously support a policy which says, to the owners of these trademarks, "You will never be able to register your trademark as a domain name in a new TLD." But that is precisely what the Reserved Names Working Group is doing.  Which is why I noted that one has to separate "potential for abuse" which is a use-based issue from "zero legitimate use" which is a reason for a flat-out exclusionary policy.

Do we care whether BIO2 International, Inc., the owner of US Reg. TM. No.2539256 for "ASO" in connection with "stabilized oxygen for use as a dietary supplement" is able to register their trademark as a domain name in some new TLD?

Do we care whether Internal Audit Bureau Inc., the owner of US TM Reg. No.3203966 for "IAB" in connection with financial services is able to someday register IAB.finance?

No, we don't, and they are not likely even aware of ICANN's existence, and certainly not aware that there is a working group that is in the process of forever banning them from registering a domain name.

If you want to get on the telephone with the CEO's of these companies (and there are quite a few among the various "reserved names" under consideration), and explain this situation to them, I'm sure they would have some choice words for this sort of policy nonsense.  If you let me listen, I'll pay for the telephone calls.

The annual International Conference on Artificial Neural Networks, which has been around for longer than the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, will NEVER be able to register "icann.event", solely due to the orgy of self-dealing which characterizes ICANN policy making.  In a world in which the string "ICANN" is legitimately used by different parties, I guess it is fortunate to be the "ICANN" which can absolutely ban the other ICANN's from registering a domain name henceforth and forevermore.  It is good to be king.

The absolute best and most effective way to prevent abuse of domain names is for us simply to declare a moratorium on registration of domain names.  If people can't register them, they can't abuse them.  As an added bonus, everyone on this list will then have more time to spend with their families. My sense is that this is just not the correct constituency to advance "more reasons why people shouldn't register domain names", which are so eloquently stated by those whose business does not relate to the registration of domain names. At the very least, the Reserved Names Working Group should find someone who can spell. Take a look at the .info reserved names here:

http://www.afilias.info/whois_search/reserved_names

It includes, and included the link because it is simply hard to believe, "bosnaihercegovina".

Now, I don't know where BosnAI is, but I have heard of a place called BosnIA.  Surely enough, you cannot register bosnaihercegovina.info, because it was duly reserved by Afilias.

Did that stop a cybersquatter from registering bosnIAhercegovina.info? Nope.  No doubt the Balkans will again lapse into several more generations of armed conflict as a consequence. So again, at the very least, when this policy is finally made, perhaps we might try to avoid putting illiterate nitwits in charge of implementing it.

The .in registry did the same thing:
http://www.inregistry.in/policies/IN_Reserved_Names-Feb2005.pdf

because the same stupid typographical error is being propagated through generations of Reserved Name lists.

Maybe the next time they inadvertently ban growers of miniature Japanese trees from registering domain names.  But if someone figures out that "Cashmere" is merely an alternate spelling of "Kashmir", then we'll have to quit buying wool clothing on the internet under an appropriate domain name.

There is no end to how stupid this is, and there is a distinct Anglo-centrism to the country list.  "Switzerland" is excluded in each of its four official languages, plus English because, well, you know, everyone *should* speak English after all.  You can register "Switzerland" in any other language, though, while some countries only get to exclude their name in English.  Absent an IDN system, for example, "Morocco" cannot be excluded in Arabic.  So instead it is excluded in English, while the other dominant language version corresponding to what is actually spoken in that country - (i.e. "Maroc" in French) - is free for anyone to register in new TLDs.

To go from "dumb" to "dumber" - all of these English designations are excluded from the .cat TLD, EVEN THOUGH IT IS A TLD SPECIFIC TO A LANGUAGE OTHER THAN ENGLISH.

What DIDN'T they exclude from .cat?  The names of these countries IN CATALAN.  So, let me get this straight.  You can't register "Switzerland" in .cat because (a) it is not a Catalan word, and (b) it is the name of a country that doesn't even call itself "Switzerland" in ANY of its official languages, but it is on a "magic list".  You CAN, however, register "Suïssa" in .cat because (a) it IS a Catalan word, and (b) it is not on the "magic list", even though it is Catalan for "Switzerland".

Please, tell me where to find the medication required to think that policy makes sense.  These types of drugs are not legal in the United States.

Sooner or later, some country is going to change its name to "Porn", and growth of the Internet will come to a dead stop.  (And I wouldn't doubt that certain wild-carded ccTLD operators haven't thought about it.  You know who you are.)

As Tim pointed out, this sort of thinking only leads to temporally-based irregularities, because successive rounds of new TLDs have to have different exclusions applied to them, instead of a consistent policy across the board. One can maintain info.com, but not com.info.  Is there a useful purpose served by that?  Another odd example is that "DNSO" is duly reserved by Neulevel in .biz, but not by Afilias in .info.  Of course, the ICANN DNSO no longer exists, and the newer GNSO was already registered in .com, .net, and .org by a troublemaker before the ICANN GNSO was formed.  Nonetheless, "DNSO" is still supposed to be excluded.

Techies are used to checking a theorem against limiting cases.  The end point here, projecting forward, is that when the root zone is as large as the .com zone, it will be easy to obtain a new TLD, since there will not be any likelihood of populating it.  (I believe the growth/exclusion condition here defines a logarithmic growth curve, but the point is that each new TLD has less utility by one domain name)  It may not be the most realistic projection, but from a high-level perspective I just can't see us lining up to say, "I prefer monotonically decreasing limits on growth curves."  But that's what this policy imposes as a limiting condition.

Some things do make sense.  For example, the .eu registry reserved names list (http://www.eurid.eu/images/Documents/Blocked_names/1%20blocked.txt) thoughtfully included "1000-jaehriges-reich".  Irrational policies made by unaccountable authorities do indeed have a limited life span.

April 30, 2007

John Berryhill: "What Does Papua New Guinea Have That Procter and Gamble Wants?"..

...Pre-emptive rights to "PG" in all future TLD's (assuming they can duke it out with the Motion Picture Association of America's rating system).

> The cc.com business relies on confusing users and leaves them in the hands of a commercial institution with no oversight,

Such issues are not inherent in the two-letter strings themselves.  If there is an issue relating to how the strings are used, that is probably outside of the scope of domain name policy per se.

There is no reason why an entity named Hu is required to be beholden to the nation of Hungary for that entity's inability to register its name as a domain name, any more than endeavors in the fields of electrical engineering or information technology (ee.jobs, it.jobs) should be blocked by "claims" of the nations of Estonia and Italy.

Must Procter & Gamble buy out the nation of Papua New Guinea simply to register their own trademark as a domain name?

PS - UM, MR. and MS. user, this sort of NO IQ BS BY policy fiat IS bad PR for US, of the kind that SO makes ME want TO throw things AT MY TV (IE - BE IT AN AX or similar instrument).

(That sentence is brought to by the ccTLD's for Palestine, United States Minor Outlying Islands, Mauritania, Montserrat, Norway, Iraq, Bahamas, Belarus Iceland, Puerto Rico, the United States, Somalia, Montenegro, Tonga, Austria, Myanmar, Tuvalu, Ireland, Belgium, Italy, Netherlands Antilles, or Aland Islands.)

Jbb Play on CC TLD's courtesy of Dr.John Berryhill