ICANN finally made a decision to kill the .xxx application, with the Board voting 9-5 against it. In a bad sign for the future, the vote indicated that ICANN's approach to top level domains will be to block any proposed that are politically or culturally controversial.
ICM registry responded by releasing a court decision which ruled that the Departments of Commerce and State failed to justify withholding documents that reflect the U.S. government’s role in meddling with ICANN’s consideration of .xxx, and ordered the government to turn over the documents or fully explain its failure to do so as part of official agency deliberations about the role of the U.S. government in ICANN’s approval of .xxx.
Last May, IGP provided detailed analysis of 88 pages of documents obtained by ICM under the FOIA showing how the U.S. handled the .xxx application up to that point. Even with the major redactions, the documents showed how US supervision of ICANN was influenced by domestic political pressure. They left no room for doubt that the US altered its policy toward ICANN in response to this pressure, and that it actively worked in tandem with ICANN to conceal the nature and significance of US governmental influence over ICANN from the media.
It will not be a surprise if these new documents reveal more behind the scenes pressure by the USG.
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Friday, March 30
by
Brenden Kuerbis
on Fri 30 Mar 2007 06:30 PM EDT
Thursday, March 29
by
Brenden Kuerbis
on Thu 29 Mar 2007 06:02 PM EDT
Emerald Group Publishing has informed us that Milton Mueller's paper, IP addressing: the next frontier of internet governance debate has been selected as a Highly Commended Winner at the Emerald Literati Network Awards for Excellence 2007. more »
Tuesday, March 27
by
Milton Mueller
on Tue 27 Mar 2007 09:04 PM EDT
I just returned from ICANN’s “gala dinner,” lavish affairs that have become an institutionalized part of its meetings. My perspective on this was best encapsulated by a remark made by John Berryhill, a domain name lawyer, at the Marrakesh, Morocco meeting. As we finished a huge meal and moved on to see dozens of Berber horsemen shooting rifles, setting off fireworks and rustling camels he deadpanned, “Yeah. This is the proper way to run a computer addressing system.” more »
Monday, March 26
by
Milton Mueller
on Mon 26 Mar 2007 07:11 AM EDT
I am at the Lisbon, Portugal meeting of ICANN. There are about 900 registrants and maybe 400 at the plenary sessions at any one time. A number of interesting things are happening here, although in general this is a calm and relatively routine meeting. Judging from the growing amount of swag you get with registration, ICANN looks prosperous and confident. Items of note include: growing pressures to find an acceptable compromise on Whois policy reforms; a surprise
appearance from the Secretary-General of the ITU on Friday; and an announcement this morning from ICANN CEO Paul Twomey that a final decision on the .xxx TLD will be made this week. more »
Friday, March 23
by
Brenden Kuerbis
on Fri 23 Mar 2007 11:27 AM EDT
During recent testimony to the US House Committee on Energy and Commerce, the NTIA requested that documents containing advice it received from the Department of Justice during the recent .com contract negotiations between ICANN and VeriSign not be revealed to the public:
Ironically, NTIA made this request on the heels of Sunshine Week, during which the House has passed four measures that promote and preserve open government, including a bill to strengthen the Freedom of Information Act. Why would the public benefit from seeing these documents? At the time of the contracts release, sentiment among registries, registrars and registrants was very negative, citing anti-trust concerns. Eventually, however, the contract was approved. So one has to wonder, if DoJ's review was favorable what's the big deal about putting them in the public record? Thursday, March 22
by
Milton Mueller
on Thu 22 Mar 2007 03:27 PM EDT
Another statement voicing opposition to the efforts by ICANN's Government Advisory Committee to assert censorship authority over new top level domain strings has been released. Written by Michael Palage and Avri Doria, it shows how widespread and deep the concerns have become. Palage is a former ICANN Board member, an intellectual property lawyer and (hold this against him ;-)) inventor of the "sunrise" proposal for protecting trademarks in new top level domains. Doria is a longtime IETF participant, WSIS civil society activist, former member of the UN Working Group on Internet Governance, feminist, and definitely not a lawyer. The statement, "Please Keep the Core Neutral," argues that "when the politics of censorship rather than solely technical concerns drive the coordination of “core” Internet resources, it threatens the future security and stability of the Internet. A month ago, IGP led the charge against this provision with an alert on the GAC proposed policy.
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