|  | <<  
             ^ 
              >> 
            
              | Date: 2002-03-11 
 
 Der ICANN/Rollback-.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.-
 
 O'Reilly Regular Andy Oram über das Enron/Feeling und den
 ICANN/Rollback. Wir verweisen nur auf Andy Müller-Maguhns Anmerkungen
 über den Internet/Polizeistaat USA.
 
 http://www.quintessenz.at/archiv/msg01871.html
 -.-. --.-  -.-. --.-  -.-. --.-  -.-. --.-  -.-. --.-  -.-. --.-
 When the Enron scandal broke, many analysts warned, "There are lots of
 other Enrons out there." One such corporation, ICANN, is in the process of
 breaking up now.
 
 Like Enron, ICANN led a charmed life and received favor after favor from
 governments and corporations alike, in disregard of its dubious behavior. Like
 Enron, ICANN was run like a private corporation but threw its weight around
 everywhere on public policy. Like Enron, ICANN had every avenue open to
 success and yet failed, wasting huge amounts of money in the process.
 ICANN is even facing its own incipient financial scandal, stemming from its
 refusal to show its books to one of its own Board members.
 
 On February 24 came the latest in a series of scathing critiques of ICANN
 that have emerged on a regular basis since the institution was first proposed
 out of the blue to a surprised public by the Internet Assigned Number
 Authority and the monopoly domain name registrar, Network Solutions. What
 is novel about the current critique is its authorthe president of ICANN.
 
 Many of President M. Stuart Lynn's critical points are reminiscent of those
 leveled by critics outside ICANN:
 
 That it has made little progress on the key Internet issues for which it was
 formed.
 
 That it is encumbered with a structure far more complex than its tasks or
 size demand.
 
 That its attempts at accountability are "artificial."
 
 That it is living outside of its financial means.
 
 That its obscurantist process has driven away many important potential
 participants.
 
 Mr. Lynn's solutions differ radically, of course, from those of the best-known
 critics outside the organizations. These critics have highlighted the far-
 reaching implications of his proposals by calling them "ICANN 2.0." Even that
 epithet understates the case, because Lynn is actually threatening to revoke
 all the contracts and memoranda on which ICANN was based and start over,
 doing whatever he wants in their stead.
 
 Recalling the original documents and "near consensus" that predated ICANN,
 law professor Michael Froomkin writes, "The Lynn paper seeks to throw it all
 out, pretty much single handedly, and does so in a way that does violence to
 the substance and spirit of the original dealand without much thought for
 what motivated it either."
 
 To start with, Lynn's definition of the problems is self-serving. For instance,
 he is correct to label as overly ambitious, and perhaps counterproductive,
 ICANN's attempt to set up elections that involve every interested Internet user
 in the whole world. However, he wouldn't dare admit that this experiment,
 awkward as it was, created just about the only toehold for democratic activity
 in ICANN. In fact, two well-informed and severe critics of the organization
 were elected to the board, and this is probably what scared its leaders away
 from voting, not its theoretical weaknesses. (I don't feel sure, though, that an
 expansion of this cumbersome voting method would have produced more
 democracy. It might well have led to abuse and capture once powerful
 observers figured out how to play the game.)
 
 I admire Lynn's boldness in throwing off the cloak of rhetoric and bureaucracy
 that has shielded ICANN up to now from facing its problems. He has taken
 the gamble of opening up a debate that ICANN proponents have been
 vigorously suppressing for four years. The question is, since ICANN has
 failed, why should we bother listening to a solution that comes from inside
 ICANN?
 
 Given that ICANN made only laughable and token efforts in major areas (such
 as its seven new top-level domains), and given that it has renounced the
 "appropriate membership mechanisms" required by the memorandum in
 which the U.S. Commerce Department gave ICANN legal backing, why
 should we prolong its expensive tenure or grant its leaders any more power?
 
 (The origin of the "appropriate membership mechanisms" clause is
 historically pertinent. The Commerce Department was persuaded by a group
 of expert critics, the Boston Working Group, to insert this clause. It was
 seen as a necessary check on the power of a private corporation that
 controls a key part of the information infrastructure. One of the Boston
 Working Group members, Karl Auerbach, became one of the dissident board
 members elected through the democratic experiment that resulted from the
 clause. He has subsequently challenged many of the organization's seamy
 procedures and made it harder for the old boys' club to roll along as it had
 before.)
 
 What is to prevent the Commerce Department from thanking all the ICANN
 board members, staff, and volunteers for their efforts, then sending them
 home? We could easily roll back the debate four years and start again the
 public process that was aborted by the creation of ICANN. If Lynn were really
 willing to make "hard decisions" and work from a "candid assessment of
 ICANN's performance," he would have reached the same conclusion.
 
 Several observers, including David R. Johnson and Susan P. Crawford in their
 paper ICANN 2.0, explain that ICANN is under contract to domain-name
 registries and registrars and cannot unilaterally change all the rules of the
 game. Lynn's proposals were rejected even by RIPE NCC, an IP address
 assignment authority and one of the Internet's most central and long-
 established organizations.
 
 Many who currently follow ICANN's antics do not know what the domain
 name debate was like before ICANN was proposed. In truth, many healthy
 activities were taking place. In 1997 and 1998, the Commerce Department
 started an open, public comment process and released a White Paper that
 provided a focal point for all the groups interested in domain names. The
 locus for discussion was called the International Forum on the White Paper
 (IFWP) and was the only organization in the history of this sorry affair that
 included all stake-holders. They were making progress toward consensus,
 too, when they were pre-empted and undermined by the proposal to create
 ICANN.
 
 The initial board of ICANN was chosen by a small group of people in a secret
 process. No one on that board had prior experience in areas of Internet
 policy. The backers of ICANN probably thought this strategy would maximize
 the power of the puppeteers hidden in the rafters, but instead it created
 paralysis and incompetence. Thus, ICANN did not fulfill the White Paper so
 much as flout it. The organization has labored unsuccessfully since its
 inception to gain legitimacy; in his aggressive treatment Lynn could well have
 dealt his patient the death blow.
 
 The environment now is quite different from what it was in the Spring of 1998,
 of course. The World Intellectual Property Organization is trying to make
 policy in domain names, as the U.S. government asked it to do in the White
 Paper (though it certainly needed no invitation). Relationships between
 participants in the debate have been reshuffled by new laws such as the ill-
 considered "Trademark Cyberpiracy Prevention Act," passed by the U.S. in a
 whirlwind of back-hall trading. Good or bad, such laws have given trademark
 holders the powers they were asking ICANN and WIPO for.
 
 Meanwhile, many of the best contributors to the debate in 1998 have
 experienced cynicism and burn-out. Few people have the patience for a truly
 consensual decision-making process; someone is going to have to take a
 little more control. This time, however, the solution should reflect the
 expertise of Internet leaders who have studied the domain name issue all
 these years.
 
 As Lynn points out in his report, the high-tech economy is very different now
 from when ICANN was formed. This may actually be good for debate. The dot-
 com boom of the late 1990s made corporations drunk with excitement about
 getting on the Internet; they felt that the Information Highway was paved with
 gold that was theirs to enjoy if only they gained control. That is why the
 stakes seemed so high in the debate between trademark holders and
 ordinary folks on the Internet. Now these businesses are humbler and less
 convinced that domination will lead to profit. A sane policy for domain names
 is possibly more likely to get a hearing.
 
 ICANN itself has changed the environment in ways that we can't reverse, and
 probably don't want to. For instance, there's no point in eliminating the
 handful of new top-level domains they created, or in taking away the power of
 the new registrars with which they signed contracts. But the significance of
 these domains and registrars (such as it is) will soon vanish in the swarm of
 new TLDs that a new body can create. This would also be a good time to
 recognize the thriving world of alternative domains that is already in operation
 thanks to the Open Root Server Confederation (ORSC), Name.Space,
 New.net, and others.
 
 Noch wesentlich mehr
 http://www.oreillynet.com/cs/weblog/view/wlg/1188
 
 
 -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.-
 - -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.-
 edited by Harkank
 published on: 2002-03-11
 comments to office@quintessenz.at
 subscribe Newsletter
 - -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.-
 <<  
                   ^ 
                    >>
 |  |  |  |