ICANN
Type: | Private, Non-Profit |
Industry: | Internet Protocol Management |
Founded: | 1998 |
Headquarters: | 4676 Admiralty Way # 330, Marina del Rey, CA |
Country: | International, USA |
Employees: | 140 employees |
Revenue: | 63.6 million (2010) |
Website: | ICANN.org |
Key People | |
Peter Dengate Thrush Chair, Steve Crocker Vice Chair, |
ICANN is an acronym for the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, a global multi-stakeholder organization that was created and empowered through actions by the U.S. government and its Department of Commerce.[1] It coordinates the Internet DNS, IP addresses and AS numbers; which involves a continued management of these evolving systems and the protocols that underly them.
While ICANN has its roots in the U.S. government, it is now, and continues to strive to be, a community driven, international organization. Their management of an interoperable Internet covers 180 million domain names, the allocation of more than 4 billion network addresses, and the support of a trillion odd DNS look-ups everyday across 240 countries.[2]
ICANN collaborates with companies, individuals, and governments to ensure the continued success of the Internet. It holds meetings three times a year, switching the international location for each meeting; one of these serves as the annual general meeting when the new ICANN board members take their seats.[3]
The Beginning edit
On July 1st, 1997, U.S. President Bill Clinton directed the Secretary of Commerce to privatize the management of the DNS; which had heretofore been managed by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the National Science Foundation (NSF) and other U.S. research agencies.[4] The goal was to open the Internet to greater international participation and support it as a new medium of commercial competition and exchange.[5]
The following day, the Department of Commerce requested public input regarding DNS administration and structure, policy input regarding new registrars and the creation of new TLDs, and concerns regarding trademarks. More than 1,500 pages of comments were received.[6]
In January, 1998, an agency of the Department of Commerce (NTIA) issued what has become known as the "Green Paper". The document was a proposal which made clear that the agency intended to empower a non-profit entity to take control of the Internet and its DNS system.[7] The proposal drew criticism from some American lawmakers and other concerned individuals who saw the American fostered Internet about to be handed over to a Swiss entity.[8] The revised "White Paper" addressed some of those concerns but still posited the need for an Internet organization which could respect and foster stability, competition, bottom-up coordination, and international representation; while also establishing appropriate protocol and administrative mechanisms.[9] The "White Paper" did not clarify all of the divisive issues but instead called for the proposed entity to utilize its self-governance to decide the issues at hand.[10]
The Memorandum of Understanding edit
On November 25th, 1998, The U.S. Department of Commerce and ICANN entered into a Memorandum of Understanding; (MoU).[11] which officially recognized ICANN as the entity which would:
a. Establish policy for and direct the allocation of IP number blocks;
b. Oversee the operation of the authoritative root server system;
c. Oversee the policy for determining the circumstances under which new TLDs would be added to the root system;
d. Coordinate the assignment of other Internet technical parameters as needed to maintain universal connectivity on the Internet; and
e. Oversee other activities necessary to coordinate the specified DNS management functions, as agreed by the Department of Commerce and ICANN.
Once again, these responsibilities would be undertaken and guided by the principles of stability, competition, private bottom-up coordination, and representation.[12] The agreement established ICANN as an entity which would encourage transparency in its dealings and would create ample room for appeals for any binding decision it makes. The original agreement was set with an expiration of September 30th, 2000.[13]
Initial Issues edit
ICANN was immediately faced with the task of reigning in cybersquatting by creating policies necessary to protect recognized trademarks; and conversely needed to expand the number of entities accredited to function as registrars. Following the release of the White Paper, WIPO began its own its own research into how to protect trademarks and intellectual property within the changing DNS. A congressional hearing some 7 months after the empowerment of ICANN recognized the steps that the new entity had already taken to protect intellectual property, recognized the headway WIPO had made in creating further proposals, and called on intellectual property owners to become involved in ICANN. [14]
References edit
- ↑ ICANN DOC MoU
- ↑ ICANN Strategic Plan 2010
- ↑ ICANN About Meetings
- ↑ NTIA Green Paper
- ↑ ICANN DOC MoU
- ↑ NTIA
- ↑ ICANN White Paper
- ↑ ICANN Green Paper v. White Paper correspondence
- ↑ Harvard Law Document
- ↑ ICANN Greev v. White Paper correspondence
- ↑ ICANN MoU
- ↑ ICANN DOC MoU
- ↑ ICANN DOC MoU
- ↑ Congressional Hearing, July 1999