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Kurt Pritz

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Country: USA
Website:

   [pritz-immobilien.at pritz-immobilien.at]

LinkedIn:    [kurt-pritz Kurt Pritz]
Formerly a member
of the ICANN Staff


Featured in the ICANN 42 - Senegal playing card deck


Featured in the ICANN 49 - Singapore playing card deck

Kurt Pritz is a licensed attorney and the Executive Director of the Domain Name Association.[1]

Pritz is the former Chief of Strategy at ICANN. He was appointed to this role, moving on from his prior role as Senior Vice President, when ICANN's newest CEO, Fadi Chehadé, assumed his position on September 14, 2012. In his prior role, Kurt Pritz oversaw the vitality of the Multistakeholder Model, stakeholder relations, and also the New gTLD Program. These responsibilities seem to have been split up by President Chehadé.[2][3] His high-profile work has included representing ICANN at judicial and legal hearings in Washington, D.C..[4]

His resignation was announced on November 15, 2012, by CEO Fadi Chehadé, with an undisclosed conflict of interest cited as the reason.[5] The conflict in question was later reported as being a personal issue with ARI Registry Services.[6]

Prior to joining ICANN, Pritz was the Vice President of Production at Walt Disney Imagineering, where he directed the manufacturing and engineering of theme park shows worldwide. He has also worked as a plant manager for the Eaton Corporation.[7]

He holds a B.S. and M.S. in Physics, an M.B.A. and a J.D.[8]

Role within ICANN[edit | edit source]

Kurt Pritz was appointed as a Vice President of ICANN in September 2003. He was promoted to Senior Vice President for Stakeholder Relations in December, 2006.[9] As VP for Stakeholder Relations, Kurt served as spokesperson for the organization on a variety of issues, perhaps most notably its new gTLD program. He led the coordination of multiple public consultations regarding the program until it was approved and implemented by the ICANN Board. Kurt continues to provide information, presentations, answer questions and discusses issues related to the new gTLD program as they arise in different events such as the .nxt conference, and congressional hearings.[10]

In March, 2012, during the GNSO Council meeting at ICANN 43 in Costa Rica, Kurt informed the community that the ICANN Board plans to implement the "Target Time Variance" (secondary time stamp) system in determining how each new gTLD application will be grouped into batches. According to him an applicant will pick his or her "target time" to process the application on the TLD Application System (TAS) then click the submit button. The application batches will be divided based on the fastest applicant, down to the slowest from each of the five ICANN geographic regions in a round robin method. He also said the applicants will have the opportunity to try out the system to determine and adjust their response time. He explained that random selection is not feasible because of legal issues.[11] The target time variance was officially approved and named "digital archery" by the ICANN Board on March 28, 2012.[12]

Prior to the opening of the applications for the new gTLD program on January 12, 2012, Kurt announced that ICANN might release a new separate guidebook for the newly developed Applicant Support program to supplement the Applicant Guidebook. He explained that a number of questions and requests for clarifications on some points in the guidebook were received and responded to by ICANN's customer service center. He said, "We will summarize those clarifications in one document – that might be an Advisory or in the form of an updated Guidebook. In either case, the positions of applicants will not be affected as the information will repeat that in previously answered questions."[13]

Congressional Hearings on New gTLDs[edit | edit source]

On December 8, 2011, Kurt Pritz served as one of the witnesses during the U.S. Senate Hearing on ICANN's new gTLD Program. He strongly defended the program against its critics, including the Association of National Advertisers, and its anti-TLD off-shoot, CRIDO. [14] He also attended a similar hearing conducted by the House of Representatives' Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Communications and Technology on December 14.[15]

During the Senate hearing, Kurt provided the members of the Senate committee on Commerce Science and Transportation a detailed testimony regarding the program. He highlighted the fact that it took seven years for the Internet community to develop the program through a careful, transparent and inclusive discussions and debates. He emphasized that ICANN received "2400 public comments from 47 extended comment periods that resulted in over 1,400 pages of comment summary and analysis, formation of ten independent expert working groups, and 59 explanatory memoranda and independent reports." He also pointed out that world-class experts on intellectual property, economics and Internet security were involved in the development process to ensure adequate protection and solutions for trademark holders, which were in turn reviewed and examined by the Internet community and governments. He also pointed out the members of the Senate that ICANN is committed to working closely with law enforcement agencies to protect consumers. He repeated Sec. Larry Stricking's statement regarding the role of the multistakeholder process in developing the new gTLD program;"The multistakeholder process does not guarantee that everyone will be satisfied with the outcome. But it is critical to preserving the model of Internet governance that has been so successful to date that all parties respect and work through the process and accept the outcome once a decision is reached."[16]

During the hearing in the House of Representatives, Kurt repeated to the members of the subcommittee on Communications and Technology that the program took seven-years of hard work from the Internet community to develop. He emphasized that the expansion of new TLDs is a measured rolled out with much better trademark protection mechanisms, that will create more jobs and promote competition and innovation. In his testimony, he sent a message to the Congress and to the critics of the program that the Internet governing body had no intention of delaying its implementation which was scheduled for January 12, 2012.[17]

Statement Regarding HostExploit's Accusation Against eNom[edit | edit source]

In 2010, HostExploit, an anti-malware research group accused eNom, an ICANN accredited registrar, for hosting an unusually large number of malicious websites and called it the preferred registrar for pharmaceutical spammers. The group also accused the company's domain name resellers of violating ICANN rules by allowing registrants to provide inaccurate information in the Whois data base. In response to the issue, Kurt informed the research group that ICANN will investigate the issue.[18] [19]

RegisterFly Issue[edit | edit source]

RegisterFly was a problematic registrar whose accreditation was terminated by ICANN in 2009. The company started its business as a reseller for eNom. In 2004, RegisterFly purchased Top Class Names, Inc., an ICANN accredited registrar. After the acquisition, the new owners of the company assumed the accreditation and role as a registrar and its name was change to RegisterFly. In 2005, ICANN started receiving complaints of poor service from consumers. The number and substance of complaints escalated from being unresponsive and 30 minutes call hold time to overcharging of credit cards, and domain names being deleted and stolen from registrants. In 2007, Kurt issued a Notice of Breach to the company for violating several provisions of the Registrar Accreditation Agreement (RAA). He instructed RegisterFly to correct all its violations and resolve all customer complaints. He also warned the company that ICANN will terminate its accreditation agreement if it does not with the RAA.[20] He also sent a Notice of Audit to the company that ICANN will require a complete copy of all registration data for inspection. Due to the company's non-compliance, Kurt requested his counsel to send a second Notice of Breach and eventually ICANN filed a lawsuit against the company. On March 28, 2007, Kurt submiited a detailed declaration to the court about RegisterFly's violations of the RAA, which affected thousand of customers.[21] ICANN terminated the company accreditation immediately after a court order. [22]

Interview at ICANN 48[edit | edit source]

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Videos Related to New gTLDs[edit | edit source]

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References[edit | edit source]