Difference between revisions of "Stuart Lawley"

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He is involved as an investor or leader in a variety of side projects as well; this includes work with a home automation company, a health records company, and a multimedia online game company.<ref>[http://www.lawley.com/Welcome/Introduction.html lawley.com]</ref>
 
He is involved as an investor or leader in a variety of side projects as well; this includes work with a home automation company, a health records company, and a multimedia online game company.<ref>[http://www.lawley.com/Welcome/Introduction.html lawley.com]</ref>
 
===ICM===
 
===ICM===
Mr. Lawley has been with [[ICM Registry]] since 2003, and thus very much a part of the long process involved in approving the [[.xxx]] [[TLD]]; it was declined for approval in 2004, and subsequently approved in March, 2011 at the [[ICANN Silicon Valley]] meeting. It was first declined in 2000, years before Stuart became its CEO.<ref>[http://news.cnet.com/2010-1026-5176611.html News.CNET.com]</ref> Prior to launch, Stuart claimed that ICM could be bringing in around $200 million a year though .xxx; they also have plans to create a PayPal type service throughout the namespace.<ref>[http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/10_28/b4186038373596.htm BusinessWeek.com]</ref> Stuart maintains that he has "no current or historic links to the adult industry in any form".<ref>[http://news.cnet.com/2010-1026-5176611.html News.CNET.com]</ref>
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Mr. Lawley has been with [[ICM Registry]] since 2003, and thus very much a part of the long process involved in approving the [[.xxx]] [[TLD]]; it was declined for approval in 2004, and subsequently approved in March, 2011 at the [[ICANN Silicon Valley]] meeting. It was first declined in 2000, years before Stuart became its CEO.<ref>[http://news.cnet.com/2010-1026-5176611.html News.CNET.com]</ref> Stuart Lawley initially became interested in ICM when reviewing the applications for inaugural TLD introduction in 2000; he thought their proposal had real merit so he invested enough in ICM to take control of the company.<ref>[http://www.namesmash.com/the-adult-thing-to-do-an-interview-with-stuart-lawley-of-icm-registry/#more-733 Interview with NameSmash.com]</ref> Prior to launch, Stuart claimed that ICM could be bringing in around $200 million a year though .xxx; they also have plans to create a PayPal type service throughout the namespace.<ref>[http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/10_28/b4186038373596.htm BusinessWeek.com]</ref> Stuart maintains that he has "no current or historic links to the adult industry in any form".<ref>[http://news.cnet.com/2010-1026-5176611.html News.CNET.com]</ref>
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===Sponsoring Community Controversy===
 
===Sponsoring Community Controversy===
 
ICM faced a constant battle not only with ICANN and its [[GAC]], but also with the community that it claimed to represent. Stuart Lawley registered as a user of Xbiz.net, a members only forum for those involved in the adult industry, to directly answer questions and negative comments he was receiving on the forum. He immediately received a number of questions, and eventually responded to many of them full. He defended .xxx as a new income opportunity and not a burden; he defended the higher price of registration compared to a [[.com]] registration as necessary given their resources compared to [[VeriSign]]s; he promised to advertise and promote the name space to further increase its value; he claimed to have support from the industry and promised to turn the .xxx space into premium, secure real estate.<ref>[http://www.freespeechcoalition.com/images/pdf/XBIZ.net%20Thread.pdf .PDF Screen shot of Xbiz.net thread]</ref> The conversation, which was extremely variable in terms of tone and information, eventually led a number of prominent adult industry veterans to make a movie detailing ICM's business plan and deriding Mr. Lawley and his company.<ref.[http://www.juliemeadows.com/blog/tag/diane-duke/ JulieMeadows.com Blog post]</ref> The full thread from Xbiz.net can be read [http://www.freespeechcoalition.com/images/pdf/XBIZ.net%20Thread.pdf here].
 
ICM faced a constant battle not only with ICANN and its [[GAC]], but also with the community that it claimed to represent. Stuart Lawley registered as a user of Xbiz.net, a members only forum for those involved in the adult industry, to directly answer questions and negative comments he was receiving on the forum. He immediately received a number of questions, and eventually responded to many of them full. He defended .xxx as a new income opportunity and not a burden; he defended the higher price of registration compared to a [[.com]] registration as necessary given their resources compared to [[VeriSign]]s; he promised to advertise and promote the name space to further increase its value; he claimed to have support from the industry and promised to turn the .xxx space into premium, secure real estate.<ref>[http://www.freespeechcoalition.com/images/pdf/XBIZ.net%20Thread.pdf .PDF Screen shot of Xbiz.net thread]</ref> The conversation, which was extremely variable in terms of tone and information, eventually led a number of prominent adult industry veterans to make a movie detailing ICM's business plan and deriding Mr. Lawley and his company.<ref.[http://www.juliemeadows.com/blog/tag/diane-duke/ JulieMeadows.com Blog post]</ref> The full thread from Xbiz.net can be read [http://www.freespeechcoalition.com/images/pdf/XBIZ.net%20Thread.pdf here].

Revision as of 22:19, 31 August 2011

StuartLawleyPortrait.png
StuartLawleyCaricature.jpg
Country: UK
Website:

LinkIcon.png   [lawley.com lawley.com]

Facebook: Facebook.png   [Profile Stuart Lawley]
LinkedIn: LinkedInIcon.png   [Stuart Lawley Stuart Lawley]
Twitter: TwitterIcon.png   @sjlawley

Stuart Lawley is the Chairman and President of ICM Registry, Chairman at Stimulus Medical and a Director at The Rabbit Hole Ltd.[1]

The London Sunday Times named him one of the 1,000 richest people in Britain. He currently lives in Florida, USA.[2]

He attends ICANN meetings and other industry conferences.

Work[edit | edit source]

Mr. Lawley is an experienced leader, who has acted as Chairman or CEO in a number of UK and US businesses, largely within the Internet and technology sectors. He has acted as CEO of Eurofax Ltd., Alto Group Ltd., and has been the Chairman at Oneview.net. He guided Oneview.net though a public offering within the London Stock Exchange,[3] and saw the number of employees double. It was sold in March, 2000 for $200 million. Eurofax grew at a compund rate of over 40% over 12 years. Alto Group doubled in size and share values increased by 450% during his 15 month tenure.[4]

After Mr. Lawley successfully sold Oneview.net, he gave himself a brief retirement in the Bahamas, where he worked on his golf game and learned to spear fish.[5]

He is involved as an investor or leader in a variety of side projects as well; this includes work with a home automation company, a health records company, and a multimedia online game company.[6]

ICM[edit | edit source]

Mr. Lawley has been with ICM Registry since 2003, and thus very much a part of the long process involved in approving the .xxx TLD; it was declined for approval in 2004, and subsequently approved in March, 2011 at the ICANN Silicon Valley meeting. It was first declined in 2000, years before Stuart became its CEO.[7] Stuart Lawley initially became interested in ICM when reviewing the applications for inaugural TLD introduction in 2000; he thought their proposal had real merit so he invested enough in ICM to take control of the company.[8] Prior to launch, Stuart claimed that ICM could be bringing in around $200 million a year though .xxx; they also have plans to create a PayPal type service throughout the namespace.[9] Stuart maintains that he has "no current or historic links to the adult industry in any form".[10]

Sponsoring Community Controversy[edit | edit source]

ICM faced a constant battle not only with ICANN and its GAC, but also with the community that it claimed to represent. Stuart Lawley registered as a user of Xbiz.net, a members only forum for those involved in the adult industry, to directly answer questions and negative comments he was receiving on the forum. He immediately received a number of questions, and eventually responded to many of them full. He defended .xxx as a new income opportunity and not a burden; he defended the higher price of registration compared to a .com registration as necessary given their resources compared to VeriSigns; he promised to advertise and promote the name space to further increase its value; he claimed to have support from the industry and promised to turn the .xxx space into premium, secure real estate.[11] The conversation, which was extremely variable in terms of tone and information, eventually led a number of prominent adult industry veterans to make a movie detailing ICM's business plan and deriding Mr. Lawley and his company.<ref.JulieMeadows.com Blog post</ref> The full thread from Xbiz.net can be read here.

Education[edit | edit source]

He has a B.Sc. in Engineering from the University of London, 1982 — 1985.[12]

References[edit | edit source]