ICANN Terms

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The following terms are commonly used by the ICANN Community.

Actors/Roles

  • 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

  • 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

  • ASIWG – Arabic Script IDN Working Group
  • CCWG-IG – Cross-Community Working Group on Internet Governance
  • FFWG – The Fast Flux Working Group was formed by ICANN in 2008 to deal with problems and gain expert opinion on the best use of fast flux and its scope for the GNSO.
  • 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

  • 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

  • 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

  • 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

  • Registry – a database of all domain names registered under a certain TLD.

Documents

  • 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

  • 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

Mechanisms

  • 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

  • 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.
  • Fast Flux – technique evade identification and thwart anti-crime efforts aimed at identifying and shutting down websites used for illegal purposes.

Functions

Programs

Internet Architecture

  • 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

  • DNS – The Domain Name System translates between alphanumeric domain names and IP Addresses.
  • Root Zone

Protocols

  • 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

  • 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.