ICANN comes to terms with country domains

Published: 28 June 2003 y., Saturday
Internet overseeing organisation ICANN has backed down in its battle with the rest of the world and conceded that it cannot expect to dictate policy over countries outside the US. The decision - ratified late yesterday by the ICANN Board of Directors at the ICANN meeting in Montreal - is a victory of commonsense and speaks volumes about the new president/CEO Paul Twomey's reign. After four years of argument and an all-night session on Wednesday night, the Country Code Names Supporting Organization (ccNSO) was finally formed and ICANN's metamorphosis from flesh-eating maggot to the dragonfly of ICANN 2.0 was complete. The decision has delighted linchpin of the world's country-code community, Dr Willie Black, who told us he was "very happy" with the decision. Although, he concedes, "we went in very heavy and said there was no way we would be bound by these rules. They had their backs to the wall." The issues raised in the formation of the ccNSO are a microcosm of all of the wider problems of ICANN and the Internet. ICANN has spent years pressurising the rest of the world's domains - such as .uk for Britain, .fr for France - to sign a contract with it that would give ICANN ultimate control over their domains and what they did with them.
Šaltinis: theregister.co.uk
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Iraq, its domain and the 'terrorist-funding' owner

The war against Iraq may be drawing to a close but the war over its Internet future is just beginning more »

Windows CE to outship PCs in five years - researcher

In five years' time, more Windows CE devices will be shipping than Windows PCs more »

Government surveillance of online phone calls sparks controversy

Wiretapping takes on a whole new meaning now that phone calls are being made over the Internet, posing legal and technical hurdles for the FBI more »

Hidden cost

The high price of piracy more »

Sex takes backseat to Al-Jazeera site in Internet searches

In spite of being mostly knocked offline, the Web site of Arab satellite news network Al-Jazeera was among the most sought-after on the Internet last week more »

Canada becomes first to ratify NATO expansion

Canada has become the first nation to ratify expansion of the NATO defense alliance, which Latvia and six other nations have been invited to join more »

HP Thinks in 3D for Web Browsing

Hewlett-Packard's future vision of shopping online more »

Writers of Viruses Get Politics Bug

The war hasn't spawned new viruses. Instead, the same old viruses are being sent with new subject lines in the e-mail. more »

Web swarm gathers in the Netherlands

Eyebees, a Dutch-based start-up, has launched a beta version of a software application bearing the company's name that allows users to become either part of or lead an on-line "swarm" as they navigate the Internet more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »