ICANN Terms
Appearance
The following terms are commonly used by the ICANN Community.
Actors/Roles[edit | edit source]
- CA – a third party company that issues digital certificates and public-private keys as a part of a chosen Public Key Infrastructure.
- Domainer – a person who buys and sells domain names, seeking to profit from selling at a higher price later or from advertising activities.
- ICANN Fellow – A member of the Internet community and recipient of a grant provided by the ICANN Fellowship Program.
- Internet Service Provider
- Independent Objector – a position created by ICANN to determine if a new gTLD application is in the best interest of the Internet community.
- NIC – A network information center manages a registry and contracts with the registrars accredited to sell domains under a given TLD.
- Registrant – A person who has registered a domain name through a registrar.
- Registrar – A company that is authorized to sell domain names.
- Stakeholder
Communities of Practice[edit | edit source]
- DNS Stability Panel reviews proposed new TLD applications to ensure that they will not harm the security and stability of the Internet.
- GA – the General Assembly Mailing List is an open forum for participation for the GNSO.
- Constituency
- ICANN Studienkreis – an open network of experts dedicated to organizing high-level seminars on Internet industry and governance
- IESG – the Internet Engineering Steering Group oversees the technical management of the IETF.
- ICANN Bodies
- MAG
- PAB – Policy Advisory Board
- RSTEP
- TDG
- TLG
Working Groups/Work Parties[edit | edit source]
- ASIWG – Arabic Script IDN Working Group
- CCWG-IG – Cross-Community Working Group on Internet Governance
- FFWG
- IDN WG
- JIG – The Joint ccNSO-GNSO IDN Working Group deals with the introduction of IDN ccTLDs under the Fast Track Implementation Process
- PDP-WT
- PEDNR WG
- RAP WG
- VIWG
- WGIG
Task Forces[edit | edit source]
- IETF – The Internet Engineering Task Force is a large open international community of network designers, operators, vendors, and researchers concerned with the evolution of the Internet architecture and the smooth operation of the Internet.
- Whois Task Force
Teams[edit | edit source]
- CERT – A Computer Emergency Response Team or Computer Security Incident Response Team is a group designated to handle computer security.
- Communications and Coordination Work Team – GNSO team for developing proposals for the Council in response to recommendations made by the BGC WG.
- DT – A Drafting Team is established by the GNSO to advise ICANN staff and Council members on amendments to the Registrar Accreditation Agreement
- GCOT– the GNSO team for identifying areas for review to best seat a new Council and gather OSC feedback
- IRT The Implementation Recommendation Team is an Intellectual Property Constituency-created group of consumer protection and trademark law experts.
- STI-DT
Committees[edit | edit source]
- BGC - a committee established to enhance the performance of the Board, lead the annual Board performance review, including the CEO, and recommend nominees for Board Chair, Vice Chair, and other leadership positions.
- CEO Search Committee
- OSC – GNSO Operations Steering Committee
- PPSC
- SIC
- TMC
Databases[edit | edit source]
Documents[edit | edit source]
- Applicant Guidebook – ICANN guidebook for applying for new gTLDs in the New gTLD Program
- Community Objection – a formal public comment made during the objection period of the New gTLD Program.
- GPML – Global Protected Marks List was created to provide additional protection to Intellectual Property holders.
- Green Paper – The Proposal to Improve the Technical Management of Internet Names and Addresses was released by the NTIA in the Federal Register on February 20, 1998.
- GTLD-MoU – Generic Top Level Domain Name-Memorandum of Understanding, containing proposals to resolve problems associated with DNS domain name allocations, was introduced on February 28, 1997, by the Internet Ad Hoc Committee.
- ICANN Bylaws
- Registrar Accreditation Agreement – the contract that governs the relationship between ICANN and its accredited registrars.
Organizations[edit | edit source]
- APTLD – the Association for ccTLD registries in the Asia Pacific region
- ASIP – a non-profit organization, based in Jordan, for developing and modernizing intellectual property laws and systems in Arab countries.
- CORE – The Internet Council of Registrars is a non-profit organization formed in 1996 based on the gTLD-MoU to assist the launch of domain name spaces.
- EFF – The Electronic Frontier Foundation is a donor-funded non-profit organization that defends free speech, privacy, innovation, and consumer rights.
- ICANN
- IGF
- ISOC – The Internet Society
- PTI –
Processes[edit | edit source]
Mechanisms[edit | edit source]
- ADR – an Alternative Dispute Resolution is a process for helping parties under dispute resolve their argument without filing any litigation.
- Batching – ICANN's process for dividing applications for the new gTLD program into batches.
- Digital Archery – ICANN mechanism for determining the processing time or batch slots for each gTLD application using target time variance.
- Public Comment
- RSEP – ICANN process for screening and approving proposals made by gTLD operators for new registry services.
Practices[edit | edit source]
- Cybersquatting – attempting to profit by purchasing domain names made of marketable and trademark-related terms and later reselling or licensing those names back to the companies that developed the trademark
- Data Escrow – storing data with a neutral third party in case of registry or registrar failure, accreditation termination, or accreditation relapse without renewal.
- Defensive Registration – registering domain names, often across multiple TLDs and in various grammatical formats, to protect intellectual property from DNS abuse.
- Delegation – entering a new TLD into the Root Zone of the Internet.
- Direct Navigation – visiting a website while bypassing online search engines to arrive at the desired domain.
- Domain Kiting – returning a name just before the five-day period expires and re-registering it again as soon as it becomes available.
- Domain Monetization – purchasing domain names and then either selling, leasing, or parking them to earn money.
- Domain Tasting using the free five-day grace period at the beginning of ICANN's registration process to test the marketability of a specific domain name.
- Drop-Catching – the auto-registration of domains at the moment of their deletion.
Functions[edit | edit source]
- IANA –
Programs[edit | edit source]
- Fellowship Program
- New gTLD Program – a process by which ICANN accepts applications to add new TLDs to the Root Zone.
- NextGen@ICANN
Internet Architecture[edit | edit source]
- ARPANET – the first wide-area packet-switching network with distributed control to implement the TCP/IP protocol suite; the technical foundation of the Internet.
Domain Name System[edit | edit source]
- DNS – The Domain Name System translates between alphanumeric domain names and IP Addresses.
- Root Zone –
Protocols[edit | edit source]
- FTP – a TCP/IP-based network protocol to transmit files from one computer to another through the Internet.
- ENUM – Electronic Numbering is a protocol developed by the IETF's Telephone Number Mapping Working Group, which used DNS architecture and protocol to identify available services associated with E.164.
- EPP – Extensible Provisioning Protocol is an XML-based protocol used by registrars and registries in managing domain names (register, renew, modify, delete, transfer) in a Shared Registry System environment.
Domain Name[edit | edit source]
- Domain Name – An identification string that represents an IP resource, such as a computer, website, or service.
- DNSSEC extensions that enable communication authentication between hosts and DNS data, while ensuring data integrity.
- IDN – An Internationalized Domain Names is formed using characters from different scripts, such as Arabic, Chinese, Cyrillic, or Devanagari. These are encoded by the Unicode standard following IDN protocol.
- Internet Layer
- IP – Internet Protocol is the means by which data is sent from one computer to another via an Internet connection.
- IP Address – the unique number given to every computer connected to the Internet. This number allows users and other computers to find each other.
- Internet Protocol Suite
- IPv4
- IPv6
- TLD – The Top Level Domain is the last part of a domain name; see the main article for more info on types of TLDs.
- WHOIS is a query and response protocol for querying databases that store the registered users or assignees of an Internet resource, such as a domain name, an IP address block, or an autonomous system.