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US Relaxes Control Over ICANN

An anonymous reader tips news that the US Dept. of Commerce has signed an agreement with ICANN to end their current oversight responsibilities and allow more input from the global community. "The move comes after European regulators and other critics have said the US government could wield too much influence over a system used by hundreds of millions of people worldwide. Those critics have complained, among other things, about the slow rollout of Internet addresses entirely in languages other than English." The US will still be involved; every three years, ICANN's work will be evaluated by a committee, one member of which will be from the Dept. of Commerce.

11 of 230 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Can anyone tell me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    It is 4k to apply for a registrars license, then 2500 a year (USD). Then it is .20 cents a domain. Your company must have 70k in working capital and I believe 500k in assets to become a registrar.

  2. Re:So who is ICANN accountable to? by damn_registrars · · Score: 3, Informative

    ICANN is an organization composed of human beings, sooner or later it will do something that is evil.

    Too late. They have already agreed to sell gTLDs. As if the spam enforcement wasn't horrendous enough (it terms of registrar obligations), it is about to get a lot worse since with the gTLDs will go the registrar TOS.

    In other words, for some time ICANN hasn't cared about not doing "evil", as long as it makes money.

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  3. UN slow? by MosesJones · · Score: 3, Informative

    Is the UN really that slow?

    Look at UNHCR which are just about the quickest set of people to react when a disaster strikes

    Look at the Climate Change pieces which brought together the whole world and came to an agreement (sans one little country called the US)

    Now what you might mean is that it takes the UN a long time to crack down on other countries who do things that your country doesn't like, that is certainly true. These are the people after all who refused to rush into Iraq, the slow-coaches.

    The UN is an organisation that works by getting people to agree. ICANN should be the same. Having ICANN as an extension of US policy doesn't mean that things happen quicker (look how long its taken for the US to get a decent health service or a policy on climate change that makes sense) but it does mean that they are open to accusations of prejudice.

    The UN does a good job, having people like Bolton, Bush and Cheney knocking it alongside people like Qadaffi complaining about it really just underlines what a good job it is doing. If it can piss off Cheney AND Qadaffi it must be doing it right.

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  4. ICANN still isn't following its own rules by ehasbrouck · · Score: 3, Informative
  5. Re:other countries too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    There are more internet users in China than there are people in the US. QED.

  6. Re:Can anyone tell me... by FsG · · Score: 2, Informative

    This actually isn't quite true. If you become a com/net registrar, most of the money goes to VeriSign (who controls the com/net registry). The registrar has to pay VeriSign roughly $7 per domain per year that they register. The 20 cents per domain you're thinking of is the ICANN fee, which definitely exists, but isn't the biggest cost. org/info is similar, but the money goes to PIR instead of VeriSign.

    The registrars' profit margin is quite thin.

    Source: http://www.verisign.com/domain-name-services/become-registrar/com-net-registrar/index.html

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  7. Re:other countries too by brainboyz · · Score: 2, Informative

    He's right. The European Union (established by the Treaty of Maastricht on November 1, 1993) hasn't existed as long as the United States (July 4, 1776, Declaration of Independence).

  8. Re:other countries too by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 2, Informative

    Australia is introducing filters too as most /.ers know. They just didn't fit my more extreme parameter of 'anything' that undermines the state or social norms. I don't like any level of censorhip, but I wanted to focus on those countries who have policies that are the most irredeemable.

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  9. Maybe the UN would do a better job by Animats · · Score: 5, Informative

    The UN already has the Universal Postal Union and the International Telecommunications Union, which do for post offices, telephony, and radio roughly what ICANN does for the Internet. The ITU does a decent job, assigning country codes, negotiating the rules which interconnect phone systems across borders, and keeping radio broadcasters from conflicting. Nobody thinks about the Universal Postal Union much, but the fact that you can mail a letter to almost any country on earth didn't happen by accident.

    Much of what the UN really does is to act as an umbrella organization for the dull and boring mechanics of infrastructure coordination. The diplomatic level gets all the attention, but there's necessary grunt work going on in the background.

  10. Re:Other languages by Jesus_666 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Er, you do know that international domain names already exist? Look up the Wikipedia articles on IDNs and Punycode. It's bound to be enlightening.

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  11. Re:other countries too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    ITU and IPU.

    They manage quite well regardless of those countries you mention. (And I don't know why you think that the USA is so wonderful.)