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The '''Registry Agreement''' (RA) is a generic formal document constructed by [[ICANN]], it's Councils and Boards, and the community at large. It was written in order to formalize a relationship between the designated [[Registry]] of the [[TLD]] and [[ICANN]]. The document sets the rights, obligations, and other terms of agreement that the applicant must submit to in order to become a Registry Operator.<ref>[http://newgtlds.icann.org/en/applicants/agb/base-agreement-contracting Registry Agreement, New gTLDs, ICANN.org] Retrieved 10 Sept 2013</ref>
The '''Registry Agreement''' (RA) is a generic formal document constructed by [[ICANN]], it's Councils and Boards, and the community at large. It was written in order to formalize a relationship between the designated [[Registry]] of the [[TLD]] and [[ICANN]]. The document sets the rights, obligations, and other terms of agreement that the would-be [[Registry]] must submit to in order to become a Registry Operator.<ref>[http://newgtlds.icann.org/en/applicants/agb/base-agreement-contracting Registry Agreement, New gTLDs, ICANN.org] Retrieved 10 Sept 2013</ref>
==Developments==
==Developments==
===First Registry Agreement===
===First Registry Agreement===

Revision as of 22:12, 10 October 2013

The Registry Agreement (RA) is a generic formal document constructed by ICANN, it's Councils and Boards, and the community at large. It was written in order to formalize a relationship between the designated Registry of the TLD and ICANN. The document sets the rights, obligations, and other terms of agreement that the would-be Registry must submit to in order to become a Registry Operator.[1]

Developments

First Registry Agreement

The first ever Registry Agreement was signed between ICANN and Network Solutions (later bought by Verisign) on November 10th, 1999 for the gTLDs .com, .net, and .org.[2]

New gTLD Program

There has been some controversy regarding ICANN's right to unilaterally amend the RA and other agreements. On February 5th, 2013, ICANN published a new version of the RA with language that gave the organization unilateral right to amend the contract between them and Registries. A public comment period that followed the February version saw 30 comments that opposed the "right to amend" language.[3]

Resources

References

  1. Registry Agreement, New gTLDs, ICANN.org Retrieved 10 Sept 2013
  2. Registry Agreement Nov 1999, ICANN.org Retrieved 10 Oct 2013
  3. The Unilateral Right to Amend, Internet Governance.orgPublished 5 Sept 2013, Retrieved 10 Sept 2013