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'''Ram Mohan''' is the Executive Vice President of Business Operations and Chief Technology Officer at [[Afilias]] Limited. Ram joined the [[ICANN Board|ICANN Board of Directors]] as the [[SSAC]]'s non-voting liaison at the conclusion of the Cairo Meeting in 2008.<ref>[http://www.identitytheftblog.info/internet-security/ram-mohan-icann-afilias/ IdentityTheftBlog.info]</ref> He has worked extensively and led developments on Internet security and internationalization.<ref>[http://www.afilias.info/biographies/ram-mohan Afilias.info]</ref>
 
'''Ram Mohan''' is the Executive Vice President of Business Operations and Chief Technology Officer at [[Afilias]] Limited. Ram joined the [[ICANN Board|ICANN Board of Directors]] as the [[SSAC]]'s non-voting liaison at the conclusion of the Cairo Meeting in 2008.<ref>[http://www.identitytheftblog.info/internet-security/ram-mohan-icann-afilias/ IdentityTheftBlog.info]</ref> He has worked extensively and led developments on Internet security and internationalization.<ref>[http://www.afilias.info/biographies/ram-mohan Afilias.info]</ref>
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He sits on the boards of various educational and leadership non-profits in the Philadelphia area.
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He sits on the boards of various educational and leadership non-profits in the Philadelphia area, he is particularly dedicated to working with non-profits involved in the fight against cancer.
    
In 2004, [[Afilias]] was appointed as a technology advisor to the Indian Government to liberalize the [[.in]] [[ccTLD]].  Working in close coordination with government, industry and civil society, Ram led the team responsible for the transformation of the .in domain, and it went from 7,000 names registered at the start of 2005 to 140,000 registered names 10 months later.
 
In 2004, [[Afilias]] was appointed as a technology advisor to the Indian Government to liberalize the [[.in]] [[ccTLD]].  Working in close coordination with government, industry and civil society, Ram led the team responsible for the transformation of the .in domain, and it went from 7,000 names registered at the start of 2005 to 140,000 registered names 10 months later.

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